Koenigsegg Jesko Attack caused chaos in London as locals reacted to it like it was a UFO
Published on Jun 12, 2025 at 12:24 PM (UTC+4)
by Alessandro Renesis
Last updated on Jun 12, 2025 at 9:18 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Tom Wood
A Koenigsegg Jesko Attack caused chaos in London.
The Jesko Attack – the name is certainly apt, isn’t it? – was spotted in London and the whole town came to a halt.
London is certainly used to supercars, but this is no ordinary supercar.
And there was something else that kept people interested.
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The Koenigsegg Jesko Attack is the sort of vehicle that never goes unnoticed, even in London, where supercars can be spotted daily.
The Attack is a performance-focused version of the Jesko, which already sounds like a contradiction in terms because the Jesko is obviously already what you’d call performance-focused as ‘standard’.
Built entirely out of carbon fiber, this particular version also sports mandarin orange accents, which made it stand out even more.

The Jesko Attack’s V8 puts out 1,280 horsepower on regular fuel or 1,600 on E85, giving it a 0-60 time of just 2.7 seconds.
This, of course, doesn’t really matter in London, where people generally take these cars just to show them off at 9mph.
But there’s something else that people found interesting because everyone kept wondering where the car came from.

Londoners are used to seeing Bugattis, gold-plated Rolls-Royces or rare Lambos on Saudi plates, or perhaps even license plates from Qatar or the UAE.
But the Jesko was fitted with an unusual black license plates most people couldn’t recognize.
And we can hardly blame them because this car was registered in one of the world’s smallest and possibly least known countries, Liechtenstein.
Here’s a fun fact that perfectly explains how one of the world’s rarest and most expensive supercars ended up in this small country in the middle of Europe.
In Liechtenstein, there are more companies than people.
Says it all.